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The Traveler fr-1

Page 18

by John Twelve Hawks


  “You told me a few things about the Travelers when we were in the van,” Gabriel said to Maya. “But what about the rest of it? Tell me about the Harlequins.”

  Maya adjusted the cord on her sword’s carrying case. “Harlequins protect Travelers. That’s all you need to know.”

  “Are there leaders and rules? Did someone order you to come to America?”

  “No. It was my own decision.”

  “But why didn’t your father come with you?”

  Maya’s eyes were focused on the salt shaker in the middle of the table. “My father was killed a week ago in Prague.”

  “The Tabula did it?” Hollis asked.

  “Correct.”

  “What happened?”

  “That’s not your concern.” Maya’s voice was controlled, but her body was almost rigid with anger. Vicki felt like the Harlequin was ready to jump up and destroy all of them. “I’ve accepted an obligation to protect Gabriel and his brother. When that’s done, I’m going to hunt down the man who killed my father.”

  “Did Michael and I have anything to do with this?” Gabriel asked.

  “Not really. The Tabula have been hunting my father for most of his life. He was almost killed two years ago in Pakistan.”

  “I’m sorry-”

  “Don’t waste your emotions,” Maya said. “We feel nothing for the rest of the world and expect nothing in return. When I was a child, my father used to tell me: Verdammt durch das Fleisch. Gerettet durch das Blut. It means: Damned by the flesh. Saved by the blood. Harlequins are condemned to fight a battle without end. But maybe the Travelers will save us from Hell.”

  “And how long have they been fighting this battle?” Hollis asked.

  Maya pushed the hair away from her face. “My father said that we are an unbroken line of warriors that has lasted for thousands of years. On Passover, he would light candles and read from chapter eighteen in the book of John. After Jesus spends the night in the garden at Gethsemane, Judas shows up with Roman soldiers and officers sent by the chief priest.”

  “I know that passage in the Bible,” Hollis said. “Actually, it’s kind of a strange detail. Jesus is supposed to be the Prince of Peace. Throughout the New Testament, no one has ever mentioned weapons or bodyguards, but suddenly one of the disciples-”

  “It’s Peter,” Vicki said.

  “Right. Now I remember. Anyway, Peter draws a sword and cuts off the ear of the high priest’s servant, a man named…”

  This time Hollis glanced at Vicki, knowing that she would have the answer.

  “Malchus.”

  “Right again.” Hollis nodded. “So the bad guy is standing there in the garden with only one ear.”

  “Some scholars feel that Peter was a member of the Zealots,” Maya said. “But my father believed that he was the first Harlequin to be mentioned in a historical document.”

  “Are you telling us that Jesus was a Traveler?” Vicki asked.

  “Harlequins are fighters, not theologians. We don’t make pronouncements about which Traveler is the true embodiment of the Light. The most important Traveler could be Jesus or Muhammad or the Buddha. Or it could be an obscure Hasidic rabbi who was killed in the Holocaust. We defend Travelers, but we don’t judge their holiness. That’s up to the faithful.”

  “But your father quoted from the Bible,” Gabriel said.

  “I come from the European branch of Harlequins and we have close ties with Christianity. In fact, some Harlequins read farther in the book of John. After Jesus was taken away, Peter-”

  “-backed out on Jesus.” Hollis turned away from the stove. “He was a disciple, but he denied his Lord three times.”

  “The legend is that Harlequins are damned by this. Because Peter didn’t stay loyal at that moment, we must defend the Travelers until the end of time.”

  “Sounds like you don’t buy that,” Hollis said.

  “It’s just a story in the Bible. I don’t accept it for myself, but I do believe that there is a secret history of the world. There have always been warriors defending pilgrims or other spiritual seekers. During the Crusades, a group of Christian knights began to protect the pilgrims traveling to the Holy Land. Baldwin II, the crusader king of Jerusalem, let these knights occupy part of the former Jewish temple. They began to call themselves the Poor Knights of Christ and Knights of the Temple of Solomon.”

  “Weren’t they usually called the Templars?” Gabriel asked.

  “Yes, that’s the common name. The Templars became a rich, powerful order that controlled churches and castles throughout Europe. They owned ships and would lend money to European kings. Eventually the Templars stopped occupying the Holy Land and started to defend people who made spiritual journeys. They developed connections with heretical groups, the Bogomils in Bulgaria and the Cathars in France. These people were Gnostics who believed that the soul is trapped within the body. Only individuals given a secret knowledge are able to escape this prison and enter into different realms.”

  “Then the Templars were destroyed,” Gabriel said.

  Maya nodded slowly, as if reminding herself of a story she had learned long ago. “King Philip of France feared their power and wanted to seize their treasury. In 1307, he sent his troops into the Templar headquarters and arrested them for heresy. The grand master of the Templars was burned at the stake and the order ceased to exist-publicly. But only a few Templars were killed. Most of them went underground and continued their activities.”

  “Lunchtime,” Hollis said. He set a plate of sandwiches on the table and Vicki finished making the fruit salad. Everyone sat down and began eating. Maya had relaxed slightly, but it was still an uncomfortable atmosphere. The Harlequin stared at Gabriel as if she was trying to decide if he had the power to cross over. Gabriel seemed to know what she was thinking. He looked down at his plate and picked at his food.

  “But why are you called Harlequins?” Hollis asked Maya. “Isn’t that some kind of actor with a painted face, like a clown?”

  “We took that name in the seventeenth century. The Harlequin is one of the characters in Italian commedia dell’arte, usually a clever servant. The Harlequin character wears a costume with diamond shapes. Sometimes he plays the lute or carries a wooden sword. The Harlequin always wears a mask, concealing his identity.”

  “But that’s an Italian name,” Hollis said. “I was told that Harlequins used to be in Japan and Persia and just about every other place in the world.”

  “In the seventeenth century, the European Harlequins began to contact warriors from other cultures who were also defending Travelers. Our first alliance was with the Sikhs living in the Punjab. Like the Harlequins, devout Sikhs carry a ritual sword called a kirpan. Around the same time, we also made alliances with Buddhist and Sufi warriors. In the eighteenth century, we were joined by an order of Jewish fighters in Russia and Eastern Europe that defended rabbis who studied the Kabbalah.”

  Vicki turned to Gabriel. “Lion of the Temple, the Harlequin who defended the Prophet, came from a Jewish family.”

  Hollis looked amused. “You know, I’ve been in that town in Arkansas where they lynched Isaac Jones. Thirty years ago, the NAACP and some Jewish group got together and put up a plaque in honor of Zachary Goldman. They make it like a peace-and-love brotherhood thing because this Harlequin killed two racist bastards with a crowbar.”

  “Was there ever a Harlequin gathering?” Gabriel asked. “Did the different groups ever meet in one room?”

  “That would never happen. Harlequins respect the randomness of battle. We don’t like rules. Harlequin families are connected to each other by marriage, tradition, and friendship. Some families have been allies for hundreds of years. We don’t have elected leaders or a constitution. There’s just a Harlequin way of looking at the world. Some Harlequins fight because it’s our destiny. Some of us fight to defend freedom. I’m not talking about the opportunity to buy fourteen different kinds of toothpaste or the insanity that drives a terrorist to blow
up a bus. True freedom is tolerant. It gives people the right to live and think in new ways.”

  “I still want to know about ‘Damned by the flesh, saved by the blood,’” Hollis said. “Whose blood are you talking about? The Tabula, the Harlequins, or the Travelers?”

  “Take your pick,” Maya said. “Maybe it’s everyone.”

  ***

  THERE WAS ONLY one bedroom in the house. Hollis proposed that the two women share the bed while he and Gabriel sleep in the living room. Vicki could tell that Maya didn’t like the idea. Now that she had found Gabriel, she seemed uncomfortable when he wasn’t in her sight.

  “It’ll be okay,” Vicki whispered. “Gabriel is only a few feet away. We can leave the door open if you want. Besides, Hollis has the rifle.”

  “Hollis is a mercenary. I don’t know how much he’s willing to sacrifice.”

  Maya walked several times from the living room to the bedroom as if she was memorizing the position of the doorways and walls. Then she went into the bedroom and slid the blades of her two knives between the box spring and the mattress. Both handles were sticking out. If she dropped her hand down, she could instantly pull a knife from its sheath. Finally she got into bed, and Vicki lay on the other side of the mattress.

  “Good night,” Vicki said, but Maya didn’t answer her.

  Vicki had slept with her older sister and various cousins during vacations and was used to their restless movements. Maya was different in every way. The Harlequin lay flat on her back with her hands clenched into fists. It looked as if an immense weight was pushing down on her body.

  26

  When Maya woke up the next morning she saw a black cat with a white throat sitting on the dresser. “What do you want?” she whispered, but didn’t get an answer. The cat jumped down onto the floor, glided through the doorway, and left her alone.

  She heard voices and peered out the bedroom window. Hollis and Gabriel were standing in the driveway, inspecting the damaged motorcycle. Buying a new tire meant a monetary transaction and contact with a business that was connected to the Vast Machine. The Tabula would know all about the damaged bike and activate their computer search programs to monitor motorcycle tire sales in the Los Angeles area.

  Considering her next move, she went into the bathroom and took a quick shower. The finger shields that had gotten her through United States immigration were starting to peel off her index fingers like dead skin. She got dressed, strapped both knives onto her arms, and checked her other weapons. The black cat reappeared when she left the bathroom and led her into the hallway. Vicki was washing dishes in the sink.

  “I see you met Garvey.”

  “Is that his name?”

  “Yes. He doesn’t like to be touched, and he doesn’t purr. I don’t think that’s normal.”

  “I wouldn’t know,” Maya said. “I never had a pet.”

  There was a coffeemaker on the counter. Maya poured coffee into a bright yellow mug and mixed in some cream.

  “I just made some corn bread. Are you hungry?”

  “Definitely.”

  Vicki cut a thick slice of corn bread and placed it in a bowl. The two young women sat together at the table. Maya smeared some butter on the corn bread, and then added a spoonful of blackberry jam. The first bite was delicious and she felt a moment of unexpected pleasure. Everything in the kitchen was clean and organized. Patches of sunlight glowed on the green linoleum floor. Although Hollis had broken away from the church, a framed photograph of Isaac T. Jones hung on the wall beside the refrigerator.

  “Hollis is going to buy some motorcycle parts,” Vicki said. “But he wants Gabriel to keep out of sight and stay here.”

  Maya nodded as she swallowed her corn bread. “That’s a good plan.”

  “So what are you going to do?”

  “I’m not quite sure. I need to contact my friend in Europe.”

  Vicki picked up the dirty dishes and took them over to the sink. “Do you think the Tabula know that Hollis was driving yesterday?”

  “Maybe. It depends what those three riders saw as we passed them.”

  “And what will happen if they learn about Hollis?”

  Maya’s voice was deliberately flat and unemotional. “They’ll try to capture him, torture him for information, and kill him.”

  Vicki turned with a dish towel in her hand. “That’s what I told Hollis, but he made a joke about it. He said he’s always looking for new sparring partners.”

  “I think Hollis can protect himself, Vicki. He’s a very good fighter.”

  “He’s much too confident. I think he should…”

  The screen door squeaked open and Hollis strolled in. “Okay. I’ve got my shopping list.” He smiled at Vicki. “Why don’t you come with me? We’ll buy a new tire and pick up some food for lunch.”

  “Do you need money?” Maya asked.

  “You got any?”

  Maya reached into her pocket and pulled out some twenty-dollar bills. “Use cash. After you buy the tire, leave the store right away.”

  “No reason to hang around.”

  “Avoid stores with surveillance cameras in the parking lot. The cameras are able to photograph license plate numbers.”

  Maya watched Vicki and Hollis leave. Gabriel was still outside in the driveway, pulling the tire off the motorcycle’s wheel rim. Maya made sure the gate was closed, concealing Gabriel from anyone driving down the street. She thought about discussing the next step with him, but decided that she needed to talk to Linden first. Gabriel had seemed overwhelmed by everything she had told him yesterday. He probably needed some time to think it over.

  Maya returned to the bedroom, switched on her laptop computer, and got onto the Internet with her satellite phone. Linden was either asleep or away from his computer. It took her an hour to find him and follow him to a safe conversation room. Using soft language that wouldn’t trigger Carnivore, she described what had happened.

  “Our business competitors responded with aggressive marketing tactics. Right now I’m at my employee’s house with our new associate.” Maya used a code based on random prime numbers and gave Linden the address to the house.

  The French Harlequin didn’t answer and after a few minutes she typed: “Understand?”

  “Does our new associate have the ability to travel to distant locations?”

  “Not at this time.”

  “Do you see any indications of that ability?”

  “No. He’s just an ordinary citizen.”

  “You must introduce him to a teacher who can evaluate his power.”

  “Not our responsibility,” Maya typed. Harlequins were only supposed to find and protect Travelers. They didn’t get involved in anyone’s spiritual journey.

  Once again, there was a delay of several minutes as Linden appeared to be considering his response. Finally words began to appear on the computer screen. “Our competitors have gained control of the older brother and have flown him to a research facility near New York City. They plan to evaluate his ability and train him. At this point, we don’t know their larger objective. But we must use all our resources to oppose them.”

  “And our new associate is our main resource?”

  “Correct. A race has started. At this moment, our competitors are winning.”

  “What if he won’t cooperate?”

  “Use any means necessary to change his mind. A teacher is living in the southwestern United States, protected by a community of friends. Take the associate to this location in three days. During this time, I will contact our friends and tell them that you’re coming. Your destination is…” Another pause and then a long set of coded numbers appeared on the screen.

  “Confirm transmission,” Linden typed.

  Maya didn’t answer.

  The words appeared again, this time in capital letters that demanded her agreement. “CONFIRM TRANSMISSION.”

  Don’t answer him, Maya told herself. She considered leaving the house and taking Gabriel across the
border into Mexico. That was the safe thing to do. A few seconds passed, then she placed her fingers on the computer keyboard and typed slowly. “Information received.”

  The screen went blank and Linden’s presence disappeared. Maya decoded the numbers with her computer and discovered that she was supposed to travel to a town called San Lucas in southern Arizona. And what will happen there? New enemies? Another confrontation? She knew that the Tabula would be looking for them using the full power of the Vast Machine.

  She returned to the kitchen and opened the screen door. Gabriel sat on the driveway next to the motorcycle. He had found a coat hanger, straightened it out, and bent one end of the metal rod. Now he was using this improvised tool to make sure the rear wheel axle was properly aligned.

  “Gabriel, I’d like to look at the sword you’re carrying.”

  “Go ahead. It’s sticking out of my knapsack. I left it next to the couch in the living room.”

  She remained in the doorway, not knowing what to say. He didn’t seem to realize the disrespect he was showing toward his weapon.

  Gabriel stopped working. “What’s wrong?”

  “This particular sword is very special. It’s best if you handed it to me yourself.”

  He looked surprised, then smiled and shrugged his shoulders.

  “Sure. If that’s what you want. Give me a minute.”

  Maya brought her suitcase into the living room and sat on the couch. She heard water running through the plumbing as Gabriel washed the grease off his hands in the kitchen. When he entered the living room, he stared at her as if she were a crazy person who might attack him. Maya realized that the outline of her knives was visible beneath the sleeves of the cotton pullover.

 

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